ORCID
https://orcid.org/0009-0001-5616-4958
Abstract
This article introduces Identity Restoration Theory (IRT), a new theoretical framework that explains what formerly incarcerated individuals need to reconnect with disrupted cultural identities as a pathway to reintegration. Grounded in qualitative fieldwork with Raizal ex-offenders and community leaders on San Andrés Island, Colombia, IRT is designed to conceptualize reintegration, not as institutional resettlement, but as a culturally rooted process of re-embedding identity within community and place. The framework delineates five interdependent constructs—cultural memory, place reconnection, narrative repair, communal belonging, and agency activation—that emerged inductively from participant narratives. Anchored in the postcolonial context of an Afro-Caribbean island society, IRT provides a theoretical lens that can be applied to broader reintegration challenges among displaced, migrant, and formerly institutionalized populations. Developed through doctoral research, this study offers a theoretical contribution to criminology, cultural psychology, and reentry practice. In application, IRT positions cultural identity as a foundational condition for sustainable desistance, personal transformation, and relational belonging after incarceration.
Included in
Community-Based Research Commons, Criminology Commons, Ethnic Studies Commons, Indigenous Studies Commons, Other Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons, Race and Ethnicity Commons, Social Psychology and Interaction Commons, Theory, Knowledge and Science Commons
